State v. Wells

153 S.E.2d 904, 249 S.C. 249, 1967 S.C. LEXIS 255
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedMarch 28, 1967
Docket18624
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 153 S.E.2d 904 (State v. Wells) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Wells, 153 S.E.2d 904, 249 S.C. 249, 1967 S.C. LEXIS 255 (S.C. 1967).

Opinion

Bussey, Justice.

Appellants Wells and Jones were indicted, convicted and sentenced in General Sessions Court of Charleston County for the crime of conspiracy to commit abortion. There are several grounds of appeal, of which some are urged by both appellants,, while others are asserted by the appellants separately. They both contend that they were entitled to directed verdicts of not guilty for insufficiency of evidence, which contention will be dealt with first.

In passing upon this question, it is well settled that the evidence, and inferences which reasonably can be drawn therefrom, must be viewed in its most *253 favorable light for the State. See cases collected under West’s South Carolina Digest, Criminal Law, Par. 753 (2). It is not the function of the court to pass upon the weight of the evidence, but to determine its sufficiency to support the verdict, and where there is any evidence, however slight, on which the jury may justifiably find the existence or nonexistence of the material facts in issue, or if the evidence is of such character that different conclusions as to such facts reasonably may be drawn therefrom, the issues will be submitted to the jury, see cases collected in West’s South Carolina Digest, Criminal Law, Par. 741 (1).

We, accordingly, proceed to state and review the evidence and the inferences reasonably drawn therefrom, in the- light of the applicable principles of law. Both Wells and Jones were practicing naturopaths in this state, when the practice of naturopathy was outlawed in the year 1956. They had known each other since some time in the 1920’s when Wells was a student at the National University of Physicians and Surgeons, Therapeutics, Washington, D. C., where Jones was for a time one of Wells’ instructors. According to their testimony, they had no contact thereafter with each other until about 1944, when Wells was taking the board examination in South Carolina. According to them, they were not again in contact until 1956, when they both participated in the effort to defeat the legislation which outlawed the practice of naturopathy in this state. Testimony on their behalf is to the effect that after 1956 they had no contact with each other until the time of the trial in the instant case.

Jones practiced in Horry County until 1956, and in the year 1964 was living at Garden City near Myrtle Beach in Horry County. The record fails to disclose what occupation, if any, he followed from 1956 to 1964.

Wells practiced in Charleston County where he, with the assistance of his wife, was operating a clinic in 1956. When the practice of naturopathy was prohibited, Wells and his wife secured the services of a Dr. Behling, who is a medical *254 doctor, in the operation of the clinic, where Wells continued to work, ostensibly as an assistant to Dr. Behling, Wells being so engaged in the summer of 1964.

On July 16, 1964, one Carol Franklin, a 23 year old unmarried woman, suspecting that she was pregnant, consulted one of the leading physicians in the City of Charleston who confirmed her suspicion and concluded that she was then approximately four months pregnant. In her dilemma, Carol confided in and consulted with one Maxie Ellisor, the operator of a bingo game on the Isle of Palms, where Carol resided. Ellisor had been acquainted with Wells for some five or six years, and had for a time operated a bingo game at Myrtle Beach. Ellisor and Jones both deny that they knew each other. In any event, Ellisor directed Carol to Wells, whose assistance Carol sought to effect an abortion. Upon her first contact with Wells, he wanted to know who had sent her, and ascertained that Ellisor had done so.

Wells, inferentially because he first wanted to check with Ellisor, told her to either call back or come back on the following Friday. She returned on the following Friday, and, after examination and some discussion, Wells assured her that a miscarriage could be accomplished by a series of shots, the cost of which would be $50. The series of shots prescribed by Wells was administered by one or the other of two nurses who worked for Wells. In addition, on Wells’ prescription, she took castor oil at home. On or about August 26, 1964, Wells informed Carol, following a fluoroscopic examination, that the baby had dropped to one quarter of an inch from where it would come out and for her to come back on Friday, August 28, and if the baby was still in that position, he would give her a shot of PIT (PIT is the abbreviation for Pitocin, a prescription drug which causes the uterus to contract. Among other things, it is administered to cause a miscarriage). On the 28th, she returned to obtain the shot of PIT, but after another fluoroscopic examination she was advised by Wells that the baby “had gone back up too far”, and that the shot would not help. *255 He also told Carol there was nothing further he could do, and refunded to her $20 which she had paid on account. Carol then asked Wells if he knew of anyone who could perform the abortion, and he told her that he knew of a doctor, but did not know if he was still working “in that field”, and for Carol to call him back that night at 6 o’clock.

In accordance therewith, Carol did make the call, and was informed that the doctor’s name was Jones at Myrtle Beach. She was further told by Wells to contact their mutual friend, Ellisor, for specific directions to Jones’ house and as to the price Jones would charge her for an abortion. In accordance with this advice from Wells, she contacted Ellisor and got specific information from him. The price given her was $150, which amount she borrowed from a finance company.

On the next Monday afternoon, August 31, following the directions given her by Ellisor, she went to the home of Jones at Garden City, who met her in the yard of his residence and was expecting her. Jones directed her to proceed to a designated apartment at a motel some miles north of Myrtle Beach where Jones promptly met her, and proceeded to open her cervix with an instrument. He advised her that she would abort the following day, and sent her back to her home at the Isle of Palms.

Her water ruptured on the following day, but she did not abort, and on Wednesday night she started hemorrhaging rather severely. She did not immediately seek medical attention, but on Friday telephoned the clinic with which Wells was connected and was advised by either Wells or one of his nurses not to worry that everything would be all right. By Friday night her condition was such that she had to seek attention at the Medical College Hospital, where it became evident that an abortion had been attempted upon her and that infection had set in. With medical assistance, the baby was delivered that night, but lived only several minutes.

There was no direct evidence to prove any meeting, communication or agreement between Wells and Jones. Appel *256 lants urge that the circumstantial evidence is insufficient to establish a conspiracy between them, but concede that their conviction is not totally dependent upon proof of a conspiracy between those two, because if a conspiracy existed between one of the appellants and a co-conspirator, the other appellant could well have joined the conspiracy without having any direct agreement or dealing with the appellant as to whom the conspiracy was already in existence.

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Bluebook (online)
153 S.E.2d 904, 249 S.C. 249, 1967 S.C. LEXIS 255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-wells-sc-1967.